You only need a CApolicy.inf if you want to change defaults at installation; that is, you don’t want to configure them.
For example, your AIA and CDP name will be based on the name of your CA. So if your CA is named CA-01.example.local, then that’ll be the hostname encoded in your certificates. You can specify in the CApolicy.inf file that you want it to be, for example, ca.contoso.com.
Changing the certificate renewal default from 1 year to 2 or 3 years is also a common change.
All of these can also be configured after the fact.
Regardless, this specifies how to build or use a CApolicy.inf if you want to use one:
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You only need a CApolicy.inf if you want to change defaults at installation; that is, you don’t want to configure them.
For example, your AIA and CDP name will be based on the name of your CA. So if your CA is named CA-01.example.local, then that’ll be the hostname encoded in your certificates. You can specify in the CApolicy.inf file that you want it to be, for example, ca.contoso.com.
Changing the certificate renewal default from 1 year to 2 or 3 years is also a common change.
All of these can also be configured after the fact.
Regardless, this specifies how to build or use a CApolicy.inf if you want to use one:
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/ntsysadmin/e74e6a267aa043988df1a27c946f470b%40smithcons.com.